I watch CITIZEN KANE almost every year, and actually, it's almost like experiencing it for the first time every time. There's so much packed in there that there's always a moment where I grin with delight at something I've forgotten. Never fails.
I watch CITIZEN KANE almost every year, and actually, it's almost like experiencing it for the first time every time. There's so much packed in there that there's always a moment where I grin with delight at something I've forgotten. Never fails.
THE POSTMAN is great — I had the same experience. Sounds like another AVQ&A: Stuff You Love That Has Been Forever Ruined By Some Adaptation Or Misuse.
Yes, partdavid. Me too.
He was actually pretty far along in the process of converting to Catholicism when he gave it up altogether. So he certainly saw Christianity as a big tent where both Catholics and Protestants can partake in the spirit. It was the manifest absence of the spirit in the scandals that led him to question the faith.
Lobdell attended one of Julia Sweeney's performances of LETTING GO OF GOD in L.A., and it helped him to accept what was happening to him. He describes it quite emotionally in one of the latter chapters.
Too much funny to be mediocre, yet not enough meat to be excellent. Result: B.
I thought I could shoot *anyone* with a faux-hawk.
I take it to be mostly a "we're so glad we're a cute couple!" kinda thing. Very mid-twenties.
Right here:
http://www.avclub.com/artic…
That's not running, that's falling!
Stinson Stinson Stinson Stinson.
Fixed. And thanks.
A mixture, although it's the calcified jargon of leftism that keeps them from being able to communicate with each other. Which arguably is a factor in their individual paths.
"Lunch lady" is in no way a slur.
No problem, hotsyhotcakes — thanks for not being troll-y about it. If you really want to find out what turns us on about this show, feel free to keep reading the recaps and comments, and chiming in if there's something you sincerely want to know.
I really need somebody to delineate the pregnancy-hiding strategies employed this week. I was too busy enjoying myself to notice them.
"Maybe I'd be better off with Nancy." This line and the rhythm of the scene that led up to it = such perfection that it brings a tear to my eye.
Yep. I've gotten up to make breakfast and coffee exactly zero times in my married life.
She tried to subvert it, but when Ted called her on it, she had to go back to Lily's suggestions.
I figured it for the following day, too. Skylar's eerie calm seemed appropriate considering how icy she was in the bathtub the night before.